Ilkogretim Online Elementary Education Online, 2021; Vol 20 (Issue 6): pp. 478-486


Types of synonymous nouns in English


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Types of synonymous nouns in English


It is possible to distinguish between the types of synonyms based on the tasks of the created classification. The same concept or object can be named differently in different styles or registers of speech within the same dialect or language variant (gentleman / man / chap; thrifty / economical / stingy), and also differ in dialects and variants of the same language (cowshed / cowhouse; haystack / hayrick; tap / faucet; windshield / windscreen). The belonging of synonyms to different styles and registers of speech, that is, the stylistic coloring of a word, is very important, but it does not affect the conceptual side of meaning. For example, the words please and pray convey the neutral and archaic connotations of the request, respectively; stop talking and shut up differ in the degree of emotionality and, according to it, in the spheres of use. In this case, there is no conceptual difference between denotations, but there are only restrictions of a stylistic nature, to which emotive differences can be added. For example, in the series small / little / tiny / wee (girl), the synonyms small and little differ from each other in emotiveness (small - not large in degree, size, etc .; little - small, usually emotive, often preceded by another adjective, expressing feeling: a pretty little girl), tiny enhances the meaning of small (tiny - extremely small), and wee carries semes not only of size and emotional appreciation, 33 but also a stylistic sign of belonging to a dialect (wee - very small, Scottish).
Synonyms representing the same concept in different stylistic registers are called stylistic accordingly and, as a rule, can be interchangeable (especially towards a neutral case). The differences between the two are in scope; the shades of the meaning itself are purely stylistic.
Stylistically homogeneous synonyms are usually called ideographic, or conceptual, since, belonging to one (more often neutral) stylistic sphere, they are correlated with the same concept, offering different aspects of the look at it (power - force - energy are correlated with a general concept that is maximally expressed the word power (power - ability to do or act; force - power of body or mind; energy - force, capacity to do things and get things done; beautiful - handsome – pretty good-looking describe the same sign, expressed to varying degrees The meaning common to all members of the series is called invariant, that is, unchanged, to which shades are added in each of the synonyms. The clarifying function of synonymy begins to operate. The carrier of the purest invariant meaning, stylistically neutral, is the dominant of the series. the above examples are dominated by the words power and good-looking, respectively.
If the meanings of the conceptual synonyms are completely coincide (and in a polysemantic word, LSV enter into a synonymy relationship), they are called absolute (or complete) synonyms. There are few such words in the language, and there are pairs (or rows) of absolute synonyms: not for long (spirants / fricatives). In the future, there is a redistribution of semes within the members of the series and synonyms either begin to differ in the sphere of use (term, stylistic coloring, etc.), or acquire a new semantic connotation, depending on their compatibility with other words. In the first case, they become stylistic, in the second 34 - relative (or partial) conceptual synonyms. Examples of the formation of stylistic synonyms are the separation of the spheres of functioning of the nouns valley and dale; the verbs сame and cause, the first of which refers to the general literary layer of vocabulary, and the second is used in the terminological sphere as a philosophical term. The verb cause is also included in the synonymous row cause - trigger - start, whose members are partial conceptual synonyms, differing not stylistically, but in shades of meaning (cause: make smth happen; trigger - be the cause of smth serious or violent; start – make a beginning of smth).
The same subject relatedness is also manifested in the fact that synonymous relations can appear in speech between those words that are not synonyms in the language. So, the words poet and swan are not connected by any common meaning, but in speech both of these words are used synonymously in the meaning of poet, when it comes to W. Shakespeare (the Swan of Avon). The generality of the context in this case allows us to call such synonyms contextual. A number of contextual synonyms are fixed over time
in the language, appearing in the same context, and then we can talk about the contextual synonymy of individual LSV of a polysemantic word. For example, the verbs smash, condemn, stop, fight are not synonyms in the main meaning, but in the context of racism they are united by the dominant fight.
It is important to consider synonyms not so much as words that can replace each other, but as words that clarify the thought and attitude to what is being expressed. Working on synonyms reveals not only the correspondences, but also the differences between them. These differences may relate to additional meanings, stylistic characteristics and usability. and in combination with certain words.

  1. DISCUSSION

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